Evelyn instinctively drew back a few paces. Through her brain was beating insistently the admonition that had helped her much in the past few days: "Keep calm! Don't let him think you are afraid!" Her first thought had been flight, to the village; but reason told her that was impossible. Here alone on the silent hillside, in the early night, a white woman with this strange Indian, there came over her again a pride in her American blood. She felt that she was a match for him, in wits if not in strength. And with the thought came courage. She pointed to the mule, then to herself, then to the village; and explained in Spanish. The Indian shook his head, and stood stolidly beside his mount. After his first exclamations he had remained silent, watching Evelyn intently; but she felt reassured when he made no move to approach her. As a matter of fact, his mind at that moment was a chaos of conjectures and possibilities; and while he hesitated Evelyn gasped with relief. Down the road, carrying distinctly over the night air, came the sound of furious riding—faint at first and then growing nearer, With a guttural grunt that might have meant anything, the Indian jumped upon his mule and started off toward the village, urging the animal along; and Evelyn stepped farther back into the shadow of the cacti. She felt that she had reached the breaking-point. Yet she must nerve herself this once more, for without her guide she could not go on. The hoof-beats drew near; in a minute they would pass and the rider be swallowed up in the gloom beyond. Evelyn opened her mouth and tried to call to him; but her voice failed her. Her worn-out body and her overtaxed nerves were holding her powerless to move or cry. She could only stand, helpless, and watch him sweep past. But the peon's keen eyes had caught sight of the white dress fluttering against the dark outline of the cacti, and even as he passed he reined in his mule. A few moments later he was beside her, holding his battered hat in his hand. "Your servant, seÑorita," he said courteously. Evelyn never could remember distinctly what happened after that. She had only a hazy recollection of climbing upon the mule and trying to cling there, while the man trotted beside her carrying a long, iron-pointed staff. Somewhere near the village they had turned off the main road and followed a rough path that led up into the hills. And there they had stopped at a small hacienda, where Evelyn was hospitably received. When she woke the next morning, in a clean little adobe room, and found a neat-looking Spanish woman smiling upon her, Evelyn smiled in return. Every "Confianza!" They had a hasty breakfast and started again, but rested for some time in a belt of forest during the heat of the day. In the early evening they approached a white aldea perched high upon the edge of a ravine. Evelyn's guide made her understand that they might not be allowed to pass. He implied that she was in no danger, but it was with some anxiety that she rode toward the village. They skirted the side of the ravine, which was fretted with tumbling cataracts. Steep rocks ran up from the edge of the trail and were lost in climbing forest a hundred feet above, but after a time the chasm began to widen, and small, square houses straggled about its slopes. A barricade of logs, however, closed the road, and as Evelyn approached two men stepped out from behind it. They were ragged and unkempt, but they carried good modern rifles. "Halt!" ordered one of them. "Confianza!" the guide answered, smiling, and they let him pass. Beyond the barricade, the guide stopped in front of an adobe building that seemed to be an inn, for a number of saddled mules were tied around it. Men were entering and leaving and a hum of voices came from the shadowy interior, but the peon motioned to Evelyn that she must get down and wait. Finding a stone "Confianza!" she said. "I believe you are Don Martin Sarmiento." He gave her a quick glance, and answered in good English: "It is a surprise to receive a visit from Miss Cliffe. But I must ask who gave you the password?" "SeÑora Garcia at Rio Frio." "That sounds strange. But sit down. There is something we must talk about." He waited until one of the men brought her a chair. "I understand you were going to Villa Paz," he then said. "Yes; I am anxious to join my father." "I am not sure that will be possible; but we will speak of it again. First of all, I must know why you left Valverde." Sarmiento indicated the others. "These are officers of mine, but they do not speak English, and it is not necessary that you should know their names. You have nothing to fear from us, but I must urge you to be frank." Evelyn tried to think calmly. She was in the man's power, and he wore the stamp of command, but she "Gomez is, of course, a scoundrel, and you were wise to run away," he commented when she stopped. "There are, however, matters I do not quite understand. For example, it would not be to the President's interest that he should quarrel with your father; nor do I think Altiera would approve of an alliance between his secretary and you." Evelyn blushed and tried to meet the man's searching look. "I cannot explain these things. I have told you what happened, and I came to you with—confidence." Sarmiento bowed. "We respect our password. You are safe with us; but you cannot continue your journey. The roads will be closed before you get through, and there will be fighting in the next few days. When it seems less dangerous, we must try to send you on, but in the meantime I must put you into my daughter's hands." He gave one of the officers some instructions, and the man beckoned Evelyn, but she hesitated. "I must pay my guide and send him back." "We will give him the money, but he will not go back. We shall, no doubt, find a use for him." Sarmiento smiled meaningly as he added: "It looks as if he could be trusted." Evelyn followed the officer to the back of the house The lamp was small and the light was dim; loops of vines falling about it cast puzzling shadows, but Evelyn knew the girl who rose to meet her. She had seen her talking confidentially to Grahame at the International, and was seized by jealous suspicion. A stout, elderly lady in a black dress, who was apparently the girl's duenna, sat farther back in the shadow. Blanca gave Evelyn a friendly smile of recognition, but it cost her an effort to respond. The Spanish girl seemed to understand that something was wrong, and there was an awkward silence while they stood with their eyes fixed on each other. Then Blanca said with a touch of haughtiness: "I have been told to make you as comfortable as possible, but I am sorry there is not much comfort here. One cannot expect it in a camp." She presented Evelyn to her duenna, and the seÑora Morales indicated a folding chair. "You come at a bad time," she remarked in awkward French, languidly opening a fan. "It seems we are to have more fighting; it is the way of men." "They must fight," said Blanca. "The cause is good." The seÑora Morales waved her fan. She wore a black silk mantilla fastened tightly round her head like a cowl, and her dark, fleshy face was thickly smeared with powder. Her eyes were lazily contemptuous. "There are two causes, niÑa, and it is hard to see Evelyn smiled. The duenna's remarks saved the situation from becoming strained; the woman was obviously shrewd in spite of her heavy face. "They are always quarreling in this country," the seÑora continued. "Those who will not pay their taxes call themselves Liberators; those who expect favors from the President are Patriots. If he does not give them enough, they conspire with the others to turn him out. Since everybody cannot be satisfied, there is always trouble." "But our friends are not fighting for rewards!" Blanca objected indignantly. "A few are disinterested," the seÑora conceded. She paused, and turned to Evelyn with an authoritative air. "You must tell me why you ran away from Rio Frio. I can guess something, but want to know the rest." After a moment's hesitation, Evelyn thought it prudent to comply, and the seÑora seemed to listen with sympathy. "To run away was the simplest plan, but sometimes the simplest plan is not the best," she said. "Did you think of nothing else?" "I sent a message to Mr. Grahame of the Enchantress, telling him I was in difficulties," Evelyn replied, watching Blanca. The girl looked up with quick interest, but there was no hint of jealousy in her expression. "You thought he would come to help you?" "I knew he would come if it was possible," Evelyn answered. Blanca looked her in the face with a smile of under "My father must know this at once!" she said, and hurried away. Don Martin came back with her and questioned Evelyn, and then he stood thoughtfully silent for some moments. "It is fortunate I heard this news," he said. "Your message may be intercepted, and we must try to warn Grahame that you are in our hands." He gave Evelyn a steady look. "I believe he will be satisfied with that." "You can tell him that I feel safe," Evelyn answered. Don Martin left her with a bow, and shortly afterward they heard somebody riding hard along the edge of the ravine. When the beat of hoofs died away Blanca touched Evelyn's arm. "There will be some supper after a while, but let us walk a little way up the path." They went out into the dark, passing slowly between shadowy rows of bushes which Evelyn thought were young coffee plants. She waited, believing that her companion meant to take her into her confidence. "You were rash in sending for Mr. Grahame," Blanca began. "We must hope our messenger arrives in time to stop him, but for all that——" "Do you wish him to come?" Evelyn asked. Blanca smiled. "In a sense, it does not matter to me whether he comes or not, though I would not wish him to run into danger. But he would not come alone." Evelyn started. It was not Grahame, but Walthew, "Of course, you met Mr. Walthew in Havana," she said. "And at Rio Frio!" There was a hint of triumphant coquetry and something deeper in Blanca's voice. "Indeed, Mr. Grahame should be grateful to me, because it was I who kept him his companion. Mr. Walthew had been dangerously ill, and was thinking of going home—though of course he did not tell me this——" "But if he did not tell you!" "How did I know?" Blanca laughed. "CariÑa mia, how do we know such things? Is a man's face a mask? Have we no guide except what he says?" Evelyn thought of Carmen, for Blanca had something of the great coquette's allurement and power. It was not an unconscious attraction she exercised, but the skill with which it was directed was primitive and instinctive rather than intelligent. "And you persuaded Mr. Walthew to stay!" she said. "Did you find it hard?" "Hard? Oh, no! It is not hard to persuade a young man, unless one is a fool. A word or two is enough, and I told him he might become a great libertador like BolÍvar and Garibaldi." Evelyn laughed. She liked Walthew, but he was a very modern American, and the thought of his emulating Garibaldi tickled her. Then, although it was dark, she was aware of a change in her companion's mood. Blanca's pose was different, it had somehow hardened, and her head was lifted high. "You find this amusing?" she asked in a haughty tone. "Then it is clear you do not know Mr. Walthew. He is young, but he has the spirit of these others, the great libertadores." "I've no doubt that's true," Evelyn agreed, putting her hand on Blanca's arm. "Indeed, I like and admire him very much." They turned back to the house presently, on friendly terms, for the Spaniard's anger flares up quickly but soon burns down. Evelyn, however, saw that matters had gone farther than she thought, and she imagined that Walthew would have some trouble with his relatives when he went home. "But how did you and your father come to meet Mr. Walthew, and what is the Enchantress doing on the coast?" she asked. "You do not know?" There was a hint of gratified superiority in the girl's tone. "She is bringing us the rifles that we need." Evelyn asked no more questions, because her talk with Blanca had given her much to think about, and when supper was over she sat outside the tent alone. The moon was rising above the tall sierra that ran in a rugged line across the sky. The air was warm and still, and she could hear water splashing down in the bottom of the ravine. Now and then there was a clatter of hoofs as a messenger rode up, and sometimes an order was followed by a patter of feet. Then for a time everything was silent except for a murmur of voices in the inn. The girl noticed this vacantly, for her mind was Evelyn knew what he thought. He was a poor adventurer, and she was rich. She blushed with shame, remembering how this had once weighed with her. Now it did not matter at all. Nothing mattered except that he belonged to her; but while this had never been so plain, it had not dawned on her with a sudden flash. The light had been steadily creeping in for a long time, while she stubbornly tried to shut it out, until she abandoned her futile efforts and let the warming brightness flood her. Then she thought of Grahame's danger. Don Martin had not received the note. Suppose it had fallen into Gomez's hands. What use might not that half-breed make of it! Evelyn shuddered, and breathed a half-conscious prayer that Don Martin's messenger might reach her lover in time. |